L.A. will list restaurants with coronavirus outbreaks online - Los Angeles Times
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L.A. County will list restaurants that have had COVID-19 outbreaks online

Angelenos line the block outside the Mozzaplex on March 19 as Nancy Silverton and her staff prepare to offer 300 free meals and other supplies to restaurant industry workers affected by closures due to the coronavirus pandemic.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)
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L.A. County Department of Public Health will soon begin publicly listing restaurants that have had outbreaks of COVID-19.

In a news conference Tuesday, director Dr. Barbara Ferrer said the county already lists on its website confirmed COVID-19 cases that have occurred in nursing facilities, jails and prisons, shelters, treatment centers and other “institutional settings.”

“Later this week, we will be including on this list restaurants that have had outbreaks as well,” she said.

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It’s unclear how the policy will be implemented, what constitutes an outbreak or how long the restaurants will be listed online. L.A. County’s public COVID-19 list currently includes any facility that has had at least one confirmed case among staff or residents once the facility is given official notice.

A spokesperson for the Department of Public Health did not respond to questions sent in an email Tuesday but wrote that the request was being processed.

Restaurants including Gjusta and the Mozzaplex temporarily closed after confirmed COVID-19 cases among their workers. Gjusta, which reopened for pickup and delivery last week, announced on March 30 that one of its employees had tested positive ; Mozza chef Nancy Silverton announced April 3 that she had tested positive for COVID-19 but has since tested negative. Mozza 2 Go will reopen on April 30 offering grocery items and some prepared foods.

Workers at two McDonald’s locations and a Domino’s location in L.A. County also tested positive for COVID-19. As a result, some employees at those businesses participated in strikes and protests due to concerns that employers were putting their health at risk.

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